soulfull
Well-Known Member
as title really
what/which do you use and why?
advantages/disadvantage
Thank you
what/which do you use and why?
advantages/disadvantage
Thank you
Do you want them to prevent mud fever?
I have a total wimp of a TB with 2 white legs which get mud fever at the 1st sniff of moist ground. I bought the equilibrium turn out chaps in an attempt to prevent it. Sadly last winter the mud was just too bottomless & I found it got inside the boot & made everything worse.
I will try them again as the mud isn't as bad this year but being on quite a heavy clay I think it might be too much for boots/chaps!
My horse has 4 clipped white legs so I got him the shires turnout socks/boots in an attempt to keep them a bit cleaner! last winter I got so fed up of trekking through a muddy field to find out where he had dumped his half eaten socks that I'm not even going to bother with them this year!
I'm going to buck the trend here and say that I would never, EVER use turnout chaps or boots on any of my horses.
I have only ever known them to cause or exacerbate problems. They're hot and don't breathe, mud and grit gets trapped underneath keeping legs wet and causing mud fever, and the heat up the legs which increases the risk of injury by weakening tendon fibres.
I have two greys and had a coloured with white legs until I lost him last year, and all of them have survived quite happily without turnout chaps. One is a TB prone to mud fever who can't be stabled (she's blind) and so at the start of the winter she comes onto the yard, has her legs washed and dried, and obscene amounts of pig oil slathered on them. I then add more pig oil every day to make sure her legs are mud free, and she's never had a problem.
I'm going to buck the trend here and say that I would never, EVER use turnout chaps or boots on any of my horses.
I have only ever known them to cause or exacerbate problems. They're hot and don't breathe, mud and grit gets trapped underneath keeping legs wet and causing mud fever, and the heat up the legs which increases the risk of injury by weakening tendon fibres.
I have two greys and had a coloured with white legs until I lost him last year, and all of them have survived quite happily without turnout chaps. One is a TB prone to mud fever who can't be stabled (she's blind) and so at the start of the winter she comes onto the yard, has her legs washed and dried, and obscene amounts of pig oil slathered on them. I then add more pig oil every day to make sure her legs are mud free, and she's never had a problem.